sched_userret priority adjustment patch for sched_4bsd
Stephan Uphoff
ups at tree.com
Mon Sep 27 10:20:30 PDT 2004
On Mon, 2004-09-27 at 10:16, John Baldwin wrote:
> On Saturday 25 September 2004 01:29 pm, Stephan Uphoff wrote:
> > When a thread is about to return to user space it resets its priority to
> > the user level priority.
> > However after lowering the permission its priority it needs to check if
> > its priority is still better than all other runable threads.
> > This is currently not implemented.
> > Without the check the thread can block kernel or user threads with
> > better priority until a switch is forced by by an interrupt.
> >
> > The attached patch checks the relevant runqueues and threads without
> > slots in the same ksegrp and forces a thread switch if the currently
> > running thread is no longer the best thread to run after it changed its
> > priority.
> >
> > The patch should improve interactive response under heavy load somewhat.
> > It needs a lot of testing.
>
> Perhaps the better fix is to teach the schedulers to set TDF_NEEDRESCHED based
> on on a comparison against user_pri rather than td_priority inside of
> sched_add()? Having the flag set by sched_add() is supposed to make this
> sort of check unnecessary. Even 4.x has the same bug I think as a process
> can make another process runnable after it's priority has been boosted by a
> tsleep() and need_resched() is only called based on a comparison of p_pri.
> Ah, 4.x doesn't have the bug because it caches the priority of curproc when
> it enters the kernel and compares against that. Thus, I think the correct
> fix is more like this:
>
> Index: sched_4bsd.c
> ===================================================================
> RCS file: /usr/cvs/src/sys/kern/sched_4bsd.c,v
> retrieving revision 1.63
> diff -u -r1.63 sched_4bsd.c
> --- sched_4bsd.c 11 Sep 2004 10:07:22 -0000 1.63
> +++ sched_4bsd.c 27 Sep 2004 14:12:03 -0000
> @@ -272,7 +272,7 @@
> {
>
> mtx_assert(&sched_lock, MA_OWNED);
> - if (td->td_priority < curthread->td_priority)
> + if (td->td_priority < curthread->td_ksegrp->kg_user_pri)
> curthread->td_flags |= TDF_NEEDRESCHED;
> }
>
> Index: sched_ule.c
> ===================================================================
> RCS file: /usr/cvs/src/sys/kern/sched_ule.c,v
> retrieving revision 1.129
> diff -u -r1.129 sched_ule.c
> --- sched_ule.c 11 Sep 2004 10:07:22 -0000 1.129
> +++ sched_ule.c 27 Sep 2004 14:13:01 -0000
> @@ -723,7 +723,7 @@
> */
> pcpu = pcpu_find(cpu);
> td = pcpu->pc_curthread;
> - if (ke->ke_thread->td_priority < td->td_priority ||
> + if (ke->ke_thread->td_priority < td->td_ksegrp->kg_user_pri ||
> td == pcpu->pc_idlethread) {
> td->td_flags |= TDF_NEEDRESCHED;
> ipi_selected(1 << cpu, IPI_AST);
>
> An even better fix might be to fix td_base_pri by having it be set on kernel
> entry similar to how 4.x sets curpriority. The above fix should be
> sufficient for now, however.
I don't think that this is enough since TDF_NEEDRESCHED is thread
specific and not cpu specific.
However the thread marked with TDF_NEEDRESCHED might not be the next
thread leaving the kernel.
( Can't really talk about ULE since I am trying to avoid looking at
another shiny irresistible time sink this week ;-)
I think we agree that that td_priority should be set to td_base_pri on
kernel entry. Since td_base_pri is changed by sleep and condvar
functions it should also be reset on kernel entry. (Probably from a new
ksegrp field). Condvar waits should currently non cause the base
priority to change to the current priority of the thread - otherwise
td_base_pri could get stuck at a really bad user priority.
( td->td_base_pri might end up being worse than
td->td_ksegrp->kg_user_pri when the ksegrp priority improves)
Stephan
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